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Tropical rainforests are
among the most outstanding natural
ecosystems on the planet, an awe inspiring
tangle of life to some, an unfathomable
puzzle with more questions than answers to
others. They represent the pinnacle of life
on Earth. Vegetative production (2 kg/m2/yr)
is more than double that found in the most
productive temperate forests, species
diversity hits the roof and the whole system
is considered the most important natural
regulator of the Earth's climate, for which
we are forever indebted.
Tropical rainforests, among which the Amazon
is the largest single tract on Earth, span
the globe between the tropics where rainfall
exceeds an average of 1500 mm per year (6
feet) and where temperatures do not drop
below an average of 17ºC throughout the year.
The ecosystem is entirely self-sufficient,
requiring only the steady input of sunlight
to maintain the plants, which in turn
maintain the rest through the many
interconnecting webs of interactions, checks
and balances that are a constant feature of
this twilight world.
Plants form the basic structure of the
forest on which everything else depends. The
vegetation is broadly arranged into strata (see
diagram opposite), which though not readily
observed or defined, certainly exist. The
most distinct division observable is between
the canopy - a strata exposed to the full
effects of the sun and the wind, and the
undergrowth, which is poorly illuminated in
comparison, although it is more stable with
respect to the environmental conditions of
temperature, humidity, wind and so forth.
The contrast between these microclimates can
be striking and goes some way towards
explaining the complexity of life forms,
each adapting to a unique array of
microclimates and the micro ecosystems
within them.
Animals also have been affected by the
forest's structure. In the various strata
the availability of food, the opportunities
for concealment and possible modes of
locomotion are very different. For example,
an animal living in the treetops can readily
obtain large quantities of vegetative foods
(flowers, leaves, fruit, etc.) but must have
limbs adapted to climbing, swinging, jumping,
gliding or flying from tree to tree. In
contrast, the ground dwellers have little or
no climbing ability and depend largely on
food falling down from above.
Only recently has the treetop community of
plants and animals been a focus of interest
to biologists and it is proving to be
exceedingly rich in life. More than half of
all the forest's animals are now believed to
be arboreal (living in the trees) of which
the majority complete their entire
lifecycles without even approaching the
ground.
The sheer number of species that live in
tropical rainforests exceeds the imagination.
Over the last decade the number of insect
species thought to inhabit the planet has
risen from a mere 2 million to 30 million or
more due to the intensive research now being
aimed in the direction of the tropics.
The explanations for such species richness
are numerous and are not mutually exclusive.
General theories hypothesize that the
tropics themselves have experienced a fairly
constant climate over the millennia, so that
the flora and fauna have not been adaptively
restricted as much by physical conditions,
enabling them to compete more vigorously
with each other. This competition over a
protracted length of time has resulted in
more specialized adaptations to reduce or
overcome the competition resulting in slight
physical and/or temporal changes in plant
and animal populations, culminating
ultimately in the creation of separate
species. A high degree of specialization by
organisms in these environments has been
found to be common. The more constant
environment may also have resulted in less
extinction compared to the harsher
conditions at greater latitudes where the
weak or poorly-adapted are quickly weeded
out.
It is one of the paradoxes of tropical
ecology that however luxuriant the
rainforest vegetation may appear, its
presence is not an indication of great soil
fertility; on the contrary such soils are
some of the poorest of all. This fact
however can be explained when one considers
the timescale during which plants have been
actively competing for nutrients in this
environment. Rainforests have been around
for approximately 125 million years. The
length of time that current tracts of
forests have been present can be measured
therefore in millions of years, during which
time the plants have been experiencing
greater and greater competition for soil
nutrients, so that their adaptations for
obtaining these nutrients have been steadily
honed to such an extent that today the
nutrients locked up in a dead leaf on the
forest floor can be recycled directly into
the plant without ever becoming part of the
mineral soil. 95% of nutrients as a whole
are locked up in the living matter.
Recycling of nutrients from the dead is fast
and extremely efficient.
This lack of nutrient and poor soil
structure, endemic in the tropics, is
extremely debilitating once the forest cover
has been removed and explains why farming on
most tropical forest soils is
non-sustainable and leaves permanent scars
on land which cannot be colonized
effectively by the forest again, ultimately
due to its own efficiency!
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